The Trump administration Wednesday morning sought to clarify President Donald Trump’s promise to “revisit” the DACA program if Congress does not meet his deadline to codify into law protections for so-called Dreamers.

But beyond an assurance from Justice Department spokeswoman Sarah Isgur Flores that Trump would put increased pressure on Congress to deal with the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, neither she nor counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway were willing to more fully flesh out what exactly the president might do with his promised “revisit.”

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“Nobody should be committing the president's time to this six months from now. Let's have Congress act,” Conway told Fox News on Wednesday morning, accusing Capitol Hill of “punting these issues to the executive branch” by failing to make law in the past.

“Congress should be acting on this. They either can choose to act or not to act. But it's Congress who makes the laws in this country," she said. "If they feel that strongly about this, they should act.”

On Tuesday, the Trump administration announced that it would discontinue DACA, a program that granted work permits to undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children, on grounds that it is unconstitutional and soon to be struck down by courts. A six-month delay on the program’s sunset leaves Congress a window to protect the Dreamers with legislation.

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But despite his administration’s argument that DACA is an illegal program, Trump suggested Wednesday night that his six-month deadline might not be ironclad, writing online that “Congress now has 6 months to legalize DACA (something the Obama Administration was unable to do). If they can't, I will revisit this issue!”

“Well, you can't put a lot of nuance in 140 characters. And I think revisit is a lot shorter than put more pressure. So you'll have to ask the president,” Flores, the director of public affairs for the Department of Justice, told CNN’s “New Day” on Wednesday morning when asked about the president’s online comment.

Beyond suggesting that Trump use “tools at his disposal to put more pressure on Congress,” Flores declined to clarify what other steps the president might take to shield the Dreamers, for whom he has professed “a great love” and promised to treat with “great heart.” Flores said Trump’s decision to create a six-month wind-down period for DACA would actually prove to be a compassionate step, because it removed the possibility of an immediate end to the program via court order.

She also blamed the Obama administration for creating what she said has proven to be a program with an untenable legal foundation.

“Actually the last administration targeted [Dreamers] by creating this false promise. Deferred action means that it was deferred. It means there was never a permanent situation here,” Flores said, referencing DACA’s full name. “And yes, now Congress has the chance to act on this, as they always did and should have. And I understand the last administration was frustrated. But that doesn't mean you get to make the law up on your own.”